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A marker-less human motion analysis system for motion-based biomarker identification and quantification in knee disorders

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posted on 2024-03-18, 16:46 authored by Kai ArmstrongKai Armstrong, Lei Zhang, Yan Wen, Sandy WillmottSandy Willmott, Paul Lee, Xujiong Ye
<p>In recent years the healthcare industry has had increased difficulty seeing all low-risk patients, including but not limited to suspected osteoarthritis (OA) patients. To help address the increased waiting lists and shortages of staff, we propose a novel method of automated biomarker identification and quantification for the monitoring of treatment or disease progression through the analysis of clinical motion data captured from a standard RGB video camera. The proposed method allows for the measurement of biomechanics information and analysis of their clinical significance, in both a cheap and sensitive alternative to the traditional motion capture techniques. These methods and results validate the capabilities of standard RGB cameras in clinical environments to capture clinically relevant motion data. Our method focuses on generating 3D human shape and pose from 2D video data via adversarial training in a deep neural network with a self-attention mechanism to encode both spatial and temporal information. Biomarker identification using Principal Component Analysis (PCA) allows the production of representative features from motion data and uses these to generate a clinical report automatically. These new biomarkers can then be used to assess the success of treatment and track the progress of rehabilitation or to monitor the progression of the disease.</p> <p><br></p> <p>These methods have been validated with a small clinical study, by administering a local anaesthetic to a small population with knee pain, this allows these new representative biomarkers to be validated as statistically significant (p-value, 0.05). These significant biomarkers include the cumulative acceleration of elbow flexion/extension in a sit-to-stand, as well as the smoothness of the knee and elbow flexion/extension in both a squat and sit-to-stand.</p>

Funding

EPSRC Doctoral Training Partnership (EP/T518177/1)

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Computer Science (Research Outputs)
  • College of Health and Science (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Frontiers in Digital Health

Volume

6

Publisher

Frontiers Media

ISSN

2673-253X

Date Submitted

2023-10-19

Date Accepted

2024-01-09

Date of First Publication

2024-01-23

Date of Final Publication

2024-01-23

Funder

EPSRC

Relevant SDGs

  • SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Open Access Status

  • Open Access

Date Document First Uploaded

2024-03-04

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